It will come into force next year, after emergency surveillance legislation put in place by the prior coalition government, with even less parliamentary scrutiny than the IP bill was afforded, sunsets at the end of December.

The Investigatory Power Act, as it now is, creates an updated framework for state surveillance capabilities, enshrining in law investigatory powers that had previously been authorized in the shadows, via a patchwork of obscure legislative clauses.

Some capabilities were only avowed in parliament in recent years, following the 2013 Snowden disclosures — and deemed by the UK intelligence agencies’ own oversight court to have been illegally operated as a result.

While combating terrorism has been the government’s explanation for the need for the surveillance powers set out in the legislation, they have never adequately explained how a senior exec working in fraud and error services at the Department for Work and Pensions, for example, might be actively engaged in a War on Terror.

The law also sanctions state hacking of devices, networks and services, including bulk hacking on foreign soil. And allows the security agencies to maintain large databases of personal information on U.K. citizens, including individuals suspected of no crime. Questions remain over how information harvested by domestic intelligence agencies might be shared with foreign equivalent agencies in other countries (and thus vice versa, as a workaround for any domestic surveillance limits).

The government claims a ‘double lock’ authorization process that loops in the judiciary to signing off intercept warrants for the first time in the UK, along with senior ministers, bolsters against the risk of the “most intrusive investigatory powers” being misused. Critics question this, arguing judges will just be rubberstamping warrants on process, not interrogating the proportionality of the substance.

The oversight court for UK intelligence agencies also has yet to rule on the proportionality of the law’s so-called bulk measures — it’s due to do that next month, when it will also be ruling on the legality of the powers with the wider European Union context. Rather too late to be factored into the IP bill’s parliamentary scrutiny, however.

Challenges to the legislation at the European level are likely, given European courts have ruled against bulk collection. Although the UK’s future within the EU is now crowned by a Brexit question mark — so whether UK law will be bound by any European legal judgements condemning the new surveillance law remains to be seen.

A petition to parliament to repeal the IP Act has already passed more than 140,000 signatures — exceeding the 100,000 signature threshold where parliament must consider debating a petition. But given the lack of debate in parliament the first time round it’s hard to see the majority of MPs who backed the bill suddenly waking up to the fact they sleepwalked into a surveillance state…

The dreaded & dreadful #IPBill was given Royal Assent today. The security services now have unprecedented powers to snoop on us legally.